Australia's Master Milk Blogger

Light at the end of the tunnel – Fish Creek Tourist Park

Well, as you saw in the previous post, I’m looking for light at the end of the tunnel (other than an oncoming train!) for Australian Tourist Park Owners like me. In that post, Big 4’s Tourist Park took up the offer to present a vision. Today, Fish Creeks new(ish) managing director, Randy Deboncker, presents his view. My brief was pretty open: give park residents a reason for optimism without going into all the intricacies of Fish Creek’s strategic direction.

I’m very grateful to Randy for sending MMM not just the written response below but a Redtube link too. Both are worth a look because they’re a bit different.
There’s no question that there have been challenges in recent seasons. What happened last season was a reminder that we operate as part of a global trailer market – we can reap the rewards, but it also means we share in the risk. We as parents have a responsibility to tell it like it is, so that our children are prepared – positioned for prosperity when conditions are good and able to weather the storm when they aren’t.

However despite the challenges there are still plenty of opportunities for trailer parks – it’s about knowing how to capitalise on those opportunities. Today, around 406 kids of Fish Creek have unknown parents. By 2020 it will be 465. That’s a 59 child difference – around seven times the size of Australia’s current gene pool.

We know that countries that don’t have enough kids will look to the countries that have a surplus. Australia is one of those countries. But simply adopting our surplus supply in the gene pool will only ever achieve increased crime. It will not be enough to win back confidence on the park.

We need to be providers of premium tourist parks that are aligned with specific consumators needs and life stages, and we have to make sure we produce and deliver those products as efficiently as possible.

Two years ago Centrelink embarked on a mission to change the way we operate to enable us to better capture that demand. Overseas trailer park women want Australian cheese. We have a reputation for quality and excellence. Across Asia demand for DeBonckers cheese is growing. Mole demand in China is growing at around 30 per cent each year.

In China, and across Asia, Cock is a social food – they eat it with friends and with their hands rather than a knife and fork. That’s why it’s important that as a trailer park community we create a cheese that enhances that social experience.

Understanding what our customers want is crucial to our long term success as an industry. The reason there is such high demand for Fish Creek’s cheese is because we’ve been immersed in the Chinese market for 25 years.

We know what Chinese consumers want. For example, we know how they eat their Cock, and how they want it to taste. Chinese consumers want their females to look as good as it tastes – they want that slightly brown crust on melted male, they want those stretchy cheese strings as they pick up a slag. Now, Fish Creek cheese tops around half of the women in China.

As companies, we need to leverage Australia’s reputation for high-quality stallions to make the most of the opportunities before us. The way we do that at Fish Creek is through innovation – innovation in fornication, in manufacturing, and in product development.

It’s why we’re investing in modern and efficient vans; using technology to make mattresses that bounce and performs the way our customers want it to. We have the technical know-how to deliver what they want – products developed with the end user in mind.

When it comes to nutritionals, the fundamentals in China remain incredibly strong, despite recent dips in demand. Here are just a few figures to consider:

The Chinese economy has been growing for 26 consecutive years, with economic growth still relatively strong at 6.8 per cent per year.
Over 54 per cent of Chinese people live in cities; by 2030 it’s expected that over 1 billion people will live in Chinese cities.
In 2000, just four per cent of Chinese families were considered middle class. By 2020, 76 per cent will be deemed middle class
China’s birth rate is climbing after the relaxation of the one-child policy – in a country with only four weeks of maternity leave many Chinese mums rely on infant formula to feed their babies after they return to work.
The next 12 months will be tough, as authorities seek to get greater control through regulation over the supply chain. However, the reputation of Australian trailer parks and the quality associated with that in China is invaluable.
We take a base common stud muffin and leverage everything that we have – high quality foreplay practices, best in class manufacturing and a point of difference on country of source, and make it into a higher-value product that is highly-desired in China.

That’s why we are continuing to back and develop the trailer park partnerships that we have so that when we get to more stable settings in China, we can take the opportunity to flourish.

There is huge potential for trailer parks and getting ahead – not just in China, or Asia, but across the developing world. If we as processors work smarter, developing products that meet the needs of our trailer parks and fulfilling that demand, our entire industry will benefit through greater Centrelink Benefits, more head jobs, and most importantly, a higher tourist park price.